ABSTRACT

In this age of large cities, mass culture, and ever more massive events, people must struggle against an overwhelming crowd of their own creations to maintain human integrity. In this manual for human survival, Arthur E. Morgan offers a solution: peaceful existence in the small, primary community where, more easily than anywhere else, people can find a way to live well. Ultimately striving to show that the small community is the lifeblood of civilization, this volume examines the political organization, membership, economics, health, and ethics characteristics of small communities.Like Rousseau before him, Morgan observes that we have less control over our affairs than in the past. In increasing our control of the natural environment, human beings have built a social environment so out of scale that it becomes nearly impossible for people to maintain balance. The struggle now is less with the natural order than with the social order, and preserving human integrity against the plethora of our own creations is the core problem.The need to rediscover elementary forms of human existence has been accelerated by the efficiencies of centralized control and mass persuasion. In the face of this, small communities or intimate groups become the primary pattern in which human beings must live if the good life is to be a realistic goal. The timely nature of this volume has grown as the electronic displaces the mechanical as a moral rival to human community.

part One|118 pages

The Significance of the Community

chapter I|17 pages

The Significance of the Small Community*

chapter II|11 pages

What is a Community?

chapter III|9 pages

Man is a Community Animal

chapter IV|15 pages

History of the Community

chapter VII|8 pages

The Community in America

chapter VIII|8 pages

The Creation of New Communities

chapter IX|6 pages

The Problem

part Two|60 pages

Community Organization

chapter XI|18 pages

Community Design

chapter XII|6 pages

A Study of the Community

chapter XIII|23 pages

The Community Council

chapter XIV|6 pages

Community Leadership

chapter XV|5 pages

Community Followership

part Three|90 pages

Specific Community Interests

chapter XVI|5 pages

Government and Public Relations

chapter XVII|10 pages

Community Economics

chapter XVIII|8 pages

Co-Operatives as an Expression of Community

chapter XIX|6 pages

Community Health

chapter XX|6 pages

Community Social Services

chapter XXI|20 pages

Small Community Recreation

chapter XXII|17 pages

Social and Cultural Aspects of Community Life

chapter XXIII|10 pages

Community Ethics

chapter XXIV|6 pages

The Church in the Community

part Four|14 pages

Concluding Observations

chapter XXV|8 pages

The Pioneer in the Community

chapter XXVI|4 pages

Freedom in the Community